About 400 remains of Gabrielino-Tongva tribal ancestors have been removed from a construction site in southern California.
The developer of the Playa Vista housing community plans to rebury the remains at a nearby location. For now, they remain locked in boxes amid debate over how such excavations should be handled.
Under state law, the developer consulted with the Gabrielino-Tongva Tribe. But the law doesn't allow the tribe to halt any work.
The developer says it has spent $10 million to remove the remains. The burial ground is believed to be about 200 years old.
The Gabrielino-Tongva Tribe is not federally recognized.
Get the Story:
Developer, tribe in dispute over L.A. burial site
(The San Diego Union-Tribune 9/13)
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Opinion: Indecent and cavalier treatment of
remains (06/21)
Opinion: Eviction of tribal
remains is wrong (06/07)
Work at
California burial site disturbs some (06/02)
Developer continues to remove tribal remains in
Calif. (04/05)
Developer won't halt
work at tribal burial site (03/22)
Developer removes about 400 remains from burial site
Monday, September 13, 2004
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